The room went silent when he said it. One moment, Donald Trump was railing against the “rigged” media. The next, he spun toward his own press secretary and called her “terrible” on live television. Reporters froze, unsure if they’d just witnessed a joke… or a public execution of her car… Continues…
In that brief Oval Office exchange, Trump managed to turn a routine complaint about media bias into a moment of raw human drama. Karoline Leavitt, whose job is to defend him from relentless criticism, suddenly became the target herself. His words — “You’re doing a terrible job” — cut through the room, even as he smirked and later insisted she would stay. The line between jest and humiliation blurred, leaving her to smile through the sting.
Yet the episode revealed more than a passing joke. It underscored how Trump thrives on tension, even with his own team, using public pressure as both theater and weapon. His attack on broadcasters’ licenses and his claim that the media is “an arm of the Democratic Party” weren’t new, but paired with that jab at Leavitt, they painted a picture of a leader who trusts combat more than calm, even with those standing closest to him.